Why do young workers have so many injuries?

Health and safety at work can get ridiculed in more affluent countries as something nannyish and interfering – but for much of the developing world it is a matter of life and death.

Unsafe workplaces have the kind of casualty rates more likely to be associated with going to war rather than earning a living.

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Every year there are 2.8 million deaths because of accidents at work or from work-related diseases.

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And every single day more than a million people have a serious accident or injury at work – whether in falls on badly regulated building sites or from using dangerous machinery in factories.

The figures are from the International Labour Organisation (ILO), the UN’s agency for working conditions, which this week published a report asking why so many of these accidents seemed to involve teenage workers.

Guy Ryder, director general of the ILO, says: “152 million children, who should be in school, are working. And almost half of those children are engaged in hazardous work.”

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“For youth who are old enough to enter the labour force, the available data shows that they experience a 40% greater incidence of injury on the job than their older counterparts.”

“Farmers use Chinese or Thai pesticides and they can’t read the instructions,” she says. It’s often young people, used as cheap casual labour, who might find themselves with the most dangerous work.

The international research from the ILO has identified a number of factors likely to push up the rate of accidents among young workers.

Risk factors
Young workers are more likely to be new to a job. And the research indicates that during the first month of employment workers are four times more likely to have an accident.

Youngsters make up a disproportionately high number of migrant workers, who might find themselves pushed into the most difficult and dangerous jobs, in a setting where they don’t speak the local language.

These young workers are more likely to be lacking in education, skills and training and might not be able to recognise warnings and instructions.

Whether it’s operating machinery, climbing ladders or using chemicals, inexperienced youngsters are likely to be more vulnerable to accidents.

There are also suggestions young people might be more easily persuaded by peer pressure to go along with dangerous working practices, where older workers might be more cautious.